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Thomas Beckwith
is a staff writer for The Millions and an MFA candidate at Johns Hopkins. Prior to coming to Baltimore, he studied literature and worked in IT while living in Dublin, Ireland. You can find him on Twitter at @tdbeckwith.

"Writing is the lonely sport of sad sacks." The Rumpusinterviews Lauren Groff, who's a bit of a Millions favorite. Here's her Millionsinterview and here's Arcadia as Janet Potter'sStaff Pick this past April. Also, here's a #LitBeat of a Literary Death Match she competed in earlier this year, in LA.

If there's anyone more obsessive than Sherlock Holmes, it's Glen Miranker. The former Apple executive owns the largest private collection of Sherlock Holmes works, totaling 4,500 items including books, manuscripts, illustrations, and other oddities. How he amassed such a collection isn't a mystery — he's been at it since the 1970s.

"Their reporting led to Mr. Weinstein’s firing and set off a national conversation about the prevalence of sexual assault and harassment." New York Timesreporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey will publish a book with Penguin Press about the recent sexual abuse and harassment allegations that have rocked the country. From our archives: Hannah Gersen's essay about seeing and hearing women in film.

Just when you thought I wouldn't make you sad about Alan Rickman again, here he is starring in a film adaptation of one of Samuel Beckett's short plays. In case you missed it last time, these recordings of Rickman reading from Shakespeare, Proust, and Thomas Hardy will surely generate some feelings.

“Through such experiments, [he] seems preoccupied by the need to make this familiar form something different from what we think it is, so that it can more capably capture a reality that has fast been veering into the unreal. It’s not just that the world outside the novel has made this jump, but also that we cannot evade the world’s strangeness when the storytellers, and the characters into which they breathe life, increasingly come from such different perspectives.” On Year in Reading alumChang-rae Lee’snew novel (which you can buy with a nifty 3D book cover).